A WELL-WORN CLICHÉ ABOUT THE BRITS IS THAT THEY’RE
serious, understated, subtle, and—heavens, no—certainly not
silly or anything like that. Well, Muse’s Chris Wolstenholme
is having none of it, musically or otherwise. “There’s always
been this thing with English bands where it’s a bit shoe-gaze-y,
you know what I mean? British bands find it hard to just let
loose and rock out sometimes. Back in the ’70s, British bands
were great; they had a certain over-the-top-ness. It’s almost
like bands are scared to do stuff like that now.” Not so for the
members of Muse: “We just think, Fuck it, you know?”
“Over-the-top-ness” is a good way to describe the bombastic
blend of decade-associated styles brought to bear on
Muse’s fifth studio album, The Resistance [Warner Bros.].
From the ’70s, Muse unabashedly draws on operatic, classically
influenced art-rock bands for epic tunes like “Eurasia”;
the bass-synth-inspired, totally ’80s new wave groove in
“Uprising” sounds like a cross between Gary Glitter and Gary
Numan; and it’s all powered by the hard-rock rhythm
sections of Wolstenholme’s coming-of-age
decade, the grungy ’90s. Try to imagine
mashing up Queen, Depeche Mode, and
Rage Against The Machine, and you can
understand why Chris has taken the attitude
he has. “Sometimes,” says the 30-
year-old, “it’s good to be silly.”
Guitarist/lead singer Matt Bellamy,
drummer Dominic Howard, and Wolstenholme
have been working on sound—both
individually and as a group—for 15 years.
Instead of merely taking up space, Wolstenholme
has always had to take up the
right kind of space to match Bellamy’s sonic
and melodic choices. The result of his life’s
work is a multi-layered, righteously distorted
panoply of bass tone (with a signal
path for the ages) that not only anchors
Muse as a band, but perhaps is a new standard
for sonic creativity in rock bass.
Muse is certainly a long way from the
tiny town of Teignmouth in Devon, England,
where Chris first met Matt and Dom
in their early teens. Wolstenholme had
been playing guitar and drums with a different
group when they invited him to join
their cover band. “I’d not really played
bass before. So I said I’d go along for a
couple of rehearsals and see how it went.
But then once I started playing bass, I
really enjoyed it, and I felt more comfortable
than I did on the other instruments.
Fast-forward 15 years and they’re rehearsing
for a world tour at their own custombuilt
studio in northern Italy, where The
Resistance was tracked. When they depart
they’ll be selling out arenas and opening
for U2 in select stadium shows across the
U.S. this fall. Not a bad call for a teenager!
Two Supermassive Bass Lines
CHRIS WOLSTENHOLME’S MANIC RIFFING FIRST APPEARED IN
BASS PLAYER in September ’04, when the hyperpowered, overdriven,
all-16ths line from “Hysteria” showed folks what he was
made of. Since then Chris has made a nifty habit of knocking out
relentless lines consisting of deftly deployed octaves and chromatic
passing tones that are way too much fun to play.
In “Unnatural Selection” (Ex. 1), from The Resistance, Chris
tunes down not just the E string (to D) but also the A to G for a
rocking unison riff that flies off the fingers once you get the hang
of the open G. “I think I originally played it with just the drop D,
but I like to play riffs like that with open strings as much as possible.
I get a much nicer sustain doing that, rather than struggling
higher up the fingerboard. So I tuned the A to G and the E to D.
And you suddenly realize it’s a hell of a lot easier to play.”
In Ex. 2 we revisit “Supermassive Black Hole” (Black Holes
and Revelations) for a slower, grindier study in Muse-ology. No
tricks or alternate tunings here—just an exercise in keeping the
octaves and string-skipping nice and legato. Watch out for that
tricky fourth ending.
The only real band Wolstenholme has
ever been in has also served as his music
school. Matt, Dom, and Chris essentially
taught each other how to play and how to
play together. Whether it’s the lack of formal
training, or just an innate sense of reckless
musical abandon, the irresistible bass
lines sprinkled throughout Muse’s catalog
are a testament to what’s possible when an
interesting bass line and serving the song
aren’t mutually exclusive. And while there
are certainly some mellower bass moments
on the new record—like the three-part “symphony”
that closes the album—those familiar
with Wolstenholme’s signature sounds
and lines will have plenty to process from
The Resistance.
In recording The Resistance, what has
changed for you as a player since you
made Black Holes and Absolution?
In the past, if one of our songs didn’t
have a great bass line, I found it hard to
enjoy playing it. Now, it doesn’t bother me
so much what I’m playing as long as I can
enjoy the music as a whole. And I think
that’s something that we’ve all learned to
appreciate—that it’s not about the individual,
or massaging your own ego. It’s about
creating music that sounds good when
you’re playing together. There are some
tracks where the bass lines alone are great
to play, and some, like the symphony at the
end, that an inexperienced bass player could
easily play. And I’m fine with that. Sometimes
that’s the stuff that I enjoy playing
more now, because I don’t have to worry
too much about what I’m playing. I can just
lose myself in the music.
What was the writing process like for
this record?
Matt generally comes up with the basics
of the song. Sometimes that idea is finished
in his head before Dom and I have even
heard it. Other ideas he brings to us are
very raw—just a chord structure and a
melody—and in those environments, we’d
get in a room together and just keep playing
it over and over again, and wait for some
magic to happen. Because sometimes it can
just be one tiny little thing that somebody
does, and it will influence an entire verse,
or an entire chorus, or whatever.
Even though Matt is the songwriter, he’s
always been very open to me and Dom having
as much influence as possible. And I
think he’s been looking for that, because
he knows that a chord structure and a
melody are not always enough to pull a song
off. You need a bit of magic from somebody
else. So quite often he’s looking for things
like that to come from me and Dom.
How do you choose what kind of fuzz,
drive, and edge to use? Do you have templates
for choosing sounds?
A lot of it depends on what Matt is
doing. You don’t want the guitars and the
distortion of the bass to become one. You
want them to be separate. And that’s a very
hard thing to do, because you need to pick
a bass pedal that doesn’t work in the same
frequencies as the guitar. Matt has a lot of
weird stuff going on as well—he’s got four
different heads and several different distortion
pedals, all of which sound completely
different. So I’ll try a number of
different pedals, and work out which one
fits better where you can still hear it
amongst the guitars. Because sometimes
you hear a great bass sound … and then as
soon as the guitar comes in, it’s kind of
swallowed up. The important thing is to
make sure those guitar frequencies don’t
clash, and that they both stand up in their
own way.
In pulling it off live, are you switching
pedals yourself, or do you have automatic
triggers or assistance for combinations
of pedals?
My bass tech, Shane Goodwin, does it
all live now, which is great because a lot of
the time I’m singing as well. With each
album, the backing-vocal load has become
bigger and bigger. So it’s nice to not worry
about that side of things; there are so many
pedal changes, I kind of found myself tied
to the pedalboard the whole gig, and it
frustrated me because I didn’t feel free to
perform.
Pulling off the fast 16th-notes in the
bridge of “Resistance” from the new CD,
or “Assassin” or “Stockholm Syndrome”
from earlier albums—are you fingering
them or picking them?
On “Resistance” and “Stockholm” it’s
fingers. “Assassins” is a pick. But unless
the pick offers a sound that’s different, I
generally play with fingers because I just
don’t like the sound of a pick that often.
You lose a lot of bottom end and fatness
with it. So whenever possible, I stick with
the fingers.
Who were your favorite bands growing
up?
Mostly early-’90s American hard rock—
Nirvana, Sonic Youth, Smashing Pumpkins,
Rage Against The Machine … they were the
songs we were playing in the cover band.
Sonic Youth had a lot of noise going on; at
the time we weren’t particularly good players,
so we made up for that by making our
guitar sound as horrible as possible. Those
kinds of bands gave us the passion to want
to get onstage.
Who are your three biggest influences
as a bassist?
I’ve never really been into bass players,
as such. A lot of players are technically
incredible, but it doesn’t feel very emotional.
Les Claypool, for instance. When I was
growing up he was a massive hero, because
what he does is just stupid, you know? Listening
to Claypool definitely increases your
technical ability, because when you’re growing
up, you want to play like the people
you’re listening to. But when you’re in a
band and you’re trying to make songs that
are emotional and passionate, it’s hard to
incorporate that style of playing. But sometimes
it can go too far the other way, where
people play with real attitude and emotion
but don’t have the technical ability to pull
it off.
I’ve always respected Flea. I’m not a
huge Chili Peppers fan, but Flea is one of
these guys who’s technically very good,
but he still plays with emotion and so
much feeling, and a real sense of harmony
and melody. Also, some of the bass lines
that Brian Wilson wrote [for the Beach
Boys] were incredible—in songs like “Sloop
John B” and “God Only Knows,” the bass
is very unusual and not obvious, rarely
hitting any root notes, but still unbelievably
melodic.
Who has influenced you most as a
songwriter?
I think as a band; a lot of the influences
come from outside of rock music. The way
that Matt and I try to play, it’s more from
a harmony point of view, like a string section
would play together, where it’s not just
a bass plugging away with root notes the
whole time. In a song like “Hysteria,” for
instance, there isn’t really a single point
in that song where the bass sits on a root
note. The bass is playing is one melody,
the guitar is playing another melody, and
you can almost imagine violins and cellos
going. So there are a lot of times when the
bass is as much of a lead instrument as the
guitar is.
How has the “power trio” core of Muse
affected the way you approach the bass?
Being a three-piece, combined with the
way Matt plays guitar, have given me more
freedom than a lot of bass players have. I
don’t think there’s anywhere where he’s
just banging away playing power chords.
From a sonic point of view, the bass has to
fill a much bigger area than what would be
normal, almost like a rhythm guitar. It’s
given me the opportunity to try loads of
effects and distortions, and to try to create
something that sounds new on the bass.
There is a lot of space to fill. Sometimes
things sound great with space, but sometimes
you just want to fill them up as much
as possible.
Talk about your relationship with drummer
Dominic Howard.
With me and Dom, it’s almost like we’re
the same instrument. And it’s quite weird
onstage—if Dom makes a mistake, I make a
mistake right after him, and if I make a mistake,
he makes a mistake. I broke my wrist
in the States about five years ago, and we
had a festival in England the next week, and
I couldn’t play—so we had to get another
bass player in. He’s actually the guy who
plays keyboards for us now [live], and he’s
very good, but Dom just couldn’t play with
him, because we never really played with
anybody else. We learned our instruments
together. And the way I play is probably a
direct result of the way Dom plays, which I
just connect to when I’m playing.
Twenty years from now, what would
you like people to think when they hear
Muse and your playing?
It would just be nice to be remembered
at all! If in 10 or 20 years’ time we’re not
going anymore, it would be nice at least to
still be respected as a good band—if people
said, “You know, I still haven’t seen a concert
like Muse in 2004.”
What’s your best advice to a bassist
just starting out?
Be very open. A lot of people pigeonhole
the bass, particularly in rock music.
Listen to as many types of music as you can,
outside of rock music and contemporary
music as well. There’s a lot to learn about
bass lines from things like classical music
and jazz. And you don’t have to be a total
geek about it—it’s just nice to acknowledge
things outside of your comfort zone, because
if you want to improve as a musician in general,
you need to be educated by different
types of music. There’s only so much you
can learn from listening to rock bands.
And to a band of 15-year-olds out
there right now dreaming of selling out
Wembley Stadium?
You have to love what you do. If you’re
making music for financial gain, or for
celebrity status or whatever, that’s not good
enough. A big part of the reason we got to
where we are is because, at the end of the
day, the band is based on a friendship
between three people who love making
music together. We’ve been together in this
band for half of our lives, and the reason
for that is not because we’re great musicians—
it’s not because of the songs. We’re
three guys who love each other as friends,
and really love what we do.
CURRENTLY SPINNING
The Beach Boys, Pet Sounds [Capitol, 1966];
Does It Offend You, Yeah?, You Have No
Idea What You’re Getting Yourself Into
[Almost Gold, 2008]
Chris Wolstenholme Muses
About Muse’s Music
Showbiz [Warner Bros., 1999] “For a long time I couldn’t really listen to that album because we
felt very detached from that, like the band had moved on. And it had this weird naiveté that I
found hard to listen to for a number of years. But now I can appreciate it—I can almost listen to
it like it’s a different band. That album was good for what we were trying to achieve at the time.”
Origin of Symmetry [Warner Bros., 2001] “This felt like the first proper record we made, where
Showbiz was more of a compilation of the best songs we’d written before we got signed. It was
the first time where we came off a tour and actually went to a studio to make an album. And I
think that was the album where we became recognizable as what we are now.”
Absolution [Mushroom, 2003] “Absolution was more of a continuation of Origin, where we
knew what we wanted to do, and we’d found our feet a little bit, and we felt comfortable with
what we did.”
Black Holes and Revelations [Warner Bros., 2006] “That was probably the first album where
we really felt comfortable in the studio, and it gave us the opportunity to experiment with more
instruments, more synths, and things like that. We became a lot more familiar with the gear in
the studio as well, because up until that point, it was easy to ask a producer or an engineer to
do something for you if you didn’t understand it enough. With Black Holes we made an effort
to get into the science behind everything, and we became very comfortable with that—to the
point when we made The Resistance, we bought all our own gear, installed our own studio, and
felt very comfortable doing it like that.
Riffing On The
Resistance
Wolstenholme’s Takes On Tones From The New Record
“Uprising” That song was influenced quite a lot by [British electronica band] Goldfrapp.
We wanted to create that kind of synth-y sound, without using synthesizers. With a lot of
bass lines in the past, we combined distorted basses with synths to create a newsounding
thing, but we made
a conscious decision that the
rhythm section had to be
real, so we wanted to come up
with a bass sound that almost
sounded like a synth, but
wasn’t.
“Unnatural Selection” I think
we just wanted it to be fat as
fuck! Even though it’s a heavy
track, when you just strip it back
to the guitars themselves,
they’re not really overdriven.
They’re sort of more crunchy.
So we knew that the power of
that song had to come from the
bass. It was a case of just switching
all the amps on, and switching
both Big Muff pedals on, and
both Animatos, and seeing what
came out of it.
“Undisclosed Desires” It’s actually slap bass!We knew that that song wanted to go down
the electronic route. Because we were going more R&B, we thought we’d go for a real
chubby, plectrum-y bass sound. So we tried that and it didn’t work. I tried playing it fingerstyle,
and that didn’t work. And then just as a joke, somebody said, “Why don’t you
just try playing slap bass?” So I did it, and initially everyone was laughing their asses off.
Then we went back and listened to it, and we thought, “If we make the sound edgy enough,
it could actually sound quite cool.” So we put a Hematoma pedal on it. I had a very slight,
top-endy distortion to crunch it up a little. Obviously the danger with slap bass is if you
go for that super-clean, twangy, “nice” bass sound, it ends up sounding like Level 42. So
we just dirtied it up.
“I Belong To You” The wah/synth is actually an acoustic/electric bass with the Akai Deep
Impact pedal. We took a DI from it, and we miked it as well. I think that song had a kind
of comical sound to it, and we wanted to push that a bit further. So we tried loads of stuff,
and we tried electric basses with synth pedals, and nothing seemed to sit right with the
piano. So we had this cheap, semi-acoustic bass that was just sitting around the studio.
I’d not played it for years. It sounded quite unusual, because you don’t associate acoustic/
electric basses with synths.
Tone Generator
Basses Fender American Standard Jazz Bass,
’73 Fender Jazz Bass, Status Series II
Headless, Gibson Grabber, Gibson Ripper,
Noah Guitars Excalibur Bass, Pedulla Rapture,
Rickenbacker 4001 and 4003
Live rig (amps, cabs) Three rigs: (1) Marshall
DBS 7400 into Mills 115B bass cab; (2)
Marshall DBS 7400 into Mills 410B bass cab;
(3) same as (2). All three rigs are stacked sideby-
side on floor behind stage, and miked.
Stage monitoring is achieved with in-ear monitors
plus subwoofer sidefills.
Effects Three distinct effect loops; Loop 1 goes
to all three amps: Electro-Harmonix Octave
Multiplexer, T.C. Electronic G-Major multieffects
unit, Electro-Harmonix Big Muff p, Akai
Deep Impact SB1 Bass Synth. Loop 2 goes to
amp 2 only: Big Muff, Human Gear Animato
Distortion, HBE Hematoma Bass Overdrive,
Crowther Audio Prunes & Custard, Z.Vex Wooly
Mammoth. Loop 3 goes to amp 3 only: Big Muff, Animato, Line 6 FM4 Filter, Electrix
Filter Factory, DigiTech Synth Wah, Electro-
Harmonix Q-Tron.
“Most of the time there’s at least two amps going
at once. The only time I ever use one amp is when
I’m going for just a pure, clean sound—the idea
being that, when you use distortion, you lose a
lot of bottom end. So, apart from things like
delays and octavers, we try to avoid using distortions
on amp 1, so it’s always running clean
and we keep the bottom end. And then any
distortions are brought in on top of that. Sometimes
the Big Muff goes over the whole thing,
but most of the time I just try to keep the Big
Muff on amp 2. My normal, most-used sound
would be amp 1 being clean, amp 2 with the Big
Muff, and amp 3 with the Animato pedal.
Studio (typical signal chain) Same as live rig,
plus a clean DI for backup/re-amp purposes
Strings DR Stainless Steel Hi-Beams, .045–.105
(Medium)—new strings applied on every bass
for every show